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Brighton Centre is a conference and exhibition centre located in Brighton, England. It is the largest of its kind in southern England, [ 3 ] and is regularly used for conferences of the UK political parties and other bodies of national importance.
View history; Tools. Tools. ... This is a list of indoor arenas in the United Kingdom with an indoor seating capacity of at least 5,000, ... Brighton: Brighton Centre ...
The Brighton Dome is an arts venue in Brighton, England, that contains the Concert Hall, the Corn Exchange and the Studio Theatre (formerly the Pavilion Theatre). All three venues are linked to the rest of the Royal Pavilion Estate by a tunnel to the Royal Pavilion in Pavilion Gardens and through shared corridors to Brighton Museum.
The city centre is well served by public transport. Brighton and Hove Buses run regularly throughout the area with stops and stations at Churchill Square, Brighton Station, the Clock Tower, North Street and the Old Steine. Buses serve as the main mode of public transport in Brighton and Hove connecting all suburbs and outer areas to the city ...
The Brighton Dome Studio Theatre (formerly the Pavilion Theatre) is a theatre in Brighton, England. It is part of the wider Brighton Dome complex of buildings. It was built in 1935, originally as a supper room, but later converted into a theatre. Its audience capacity is 232 seated or 350 standing.
The stadium is close to the A27 Brighton by-pass, [41] linking it northbound to the A23 and M23 motorway towards London and southbound to the A270 and the city centre. Falmer railway station is next to the stadium; it is a nine-minute journey from Brighton railway station and seven minutes from Lewes railway station , both of which are served ...
Films were also screened later than in any other Brighton cinema: throughout the 1930s there was an 11:45 pm showing, aimed at employees of Brighton railway works who came off shift late. [4] During the Second World War Brighton Blitz , on 29 November 1940 an incendiary bomb hit the cinema, coming through the roof and landing in the auditorium ...
It closed at the end of the spring 2007 season, when money ran out. The building was leased from the University of Sussex and needed about £14 million of improvements. Also, in 2006 Brighton and Hove City Council withdrew its annual £30,000 grant in favour of other city centre arts groups; and in 2007 the Arts Council stopped its funding.